The Blessing Book: When They Walk Through the Valley of Weeping, It Will Become a Place of Refreshing Springs

Chapter One

My Valley of Weeping

As I hung up the phone, all I could do was weep. This was the sixth phone
call I’d received that week from a distraught woman who had shared with me her
heartache, leaving my heart broken as well. Their anguish-filled words echoed
in my mind:

“My husband is having an affair with my best friend.”

“I just found drugs in my son’s room.”

“I lost my job—what am I going to do?”

“My breast cancer has returned.”

So many hurting women; so many heavy, heavy burdens. I cried out to God:
“Is there no end to the pain in this world? O God, give hope to the brokenhearted
. . . wrap Your arms of comfort around my friends.”

But as I lifted each name to the throne of grace, I added my name to the
list.

If God had given me the opportunity to script my story, I’d have written
something like It’s a Wonderful Life. I’d be the lighthearted heroine Oh, yes,
I’d have a wonderful life—and so would everyone else.

The last three years of my life have looked more like scenes from Les Misérables
than from It’s a Wonderful Life. I have had struggles on every front: my relationships,
my ministry, my home, and my health. While I can laugh at some of these incidents
now, at the time I did not find them particularly amusing! See if you don’t
agree.

S c e n e 1

My husband, Jody, and I took our Polish houseguests for a Wild West adventure
to the Flying W Ranch, where we enjoyed a barbecue and western music. When we
returned home, our friends entered the house first. When they walked into the
kitchen they yelled, “Linda, come quick! Something is wrong.” As I rushed in,
I discovered that wrong did not begin to describe the condition of my kitchen.
Disaster was a better word.

A mangled screen lay in the sink.

Jagged pieces of the pantry doorframe cluttered the floor.

A kitchen cabinet door covered with splotchy, red marks dangled from
one hinge.

A chunky, brown substance that looked like vomit coated the counter
and walls.traipsing through town, seeking opportunities to bless others.

A bear had come calling. A very desperate bear. Our house had been closed
and locked, except for the window over the kitchen sink, which we’d left open
six inches for ventilation. Because the window had a twelve-foot drop-off, we
thought our house would be secure, but a ravenous bear would not be dissuaded.
Climbing on top of the grill on our deck, he lunged toward the window, heaved
his large frame up on the sill, and then smashed through the screen into food
heaven. According to neighbors, our ninety-pound dog, Barney, barked incessantly
and then stopped abruptly. Apparently the bear had swatted him to silence, leaving
a chunk of Barney fur on the floor in the process.

As we cleaned up the mess, we discovered that the bloodlike prints on the
counters had resulted from the bear breaking a large glass jar of salsa. (Was
he a Mexican bear?) The vomitlike muck turned out to be a mixture of baking
chocolate and salsa. (A Mexican bear with PMS?) When we finished cleaning up,
we went to bed, unaware that our intruder was ready for another try at the Dillow
Diner. Once again, he climbed on the grill, lunging for the now-closed window.
Hitting it hard, he fell helplessly onto the rocks below. We know this because
our houseguests happened to be looking out the window at the time. They are
now firmly convinced that the Wild West still exists!

Although our trusty dog needed a pet psychiatrist to recover from the trauma,
we were not harmed. The wildlife association said our homeowner’s insurance
would cover the cost of repairs to our kitchen. Our insurance company said the
wildlife association would cover it. They were both wrong. Months later the
Dillow bank account coughed up the money.

My plan: Come home to my wonderful, clean house and relax with our guests.

My portion: Clean up a gruesome salsa mess and live for months with jagged
door frames and open cabinets while hassling over “who pays” for bear break-ins.

S c e n e 2

I could hardly wait. My daughter Robin and granddaughter Sofia were coming
to visit us from Finland. It had been months since I’d seen either of them,
and I anticipated the fun we’d have. Visions danced in my head of trips to the
zoo, the park, and of Sofia and me laughing together. I told Robin to bring
something to wear besides jeans. I had made reservations for lunch and then
tea at a castle. Afterward we were going shopping!

When Robin and Sofia finally arrived at our home, illness dashed my dreams.
Instead of going on shopping trips together, my daughter and I took turns holding
and rocking a sick Sofia. Instead of enjoying a leisurely lunch together in
a lovely restaurant and tea in a castle, we were dressed in sweats, seated in
the kitchen, enticing a feverish toddler with finger foods. This trip was Robin’s
thirtieth-birthday present. I had plans for fun—instead we had real life.

Then on Saturday Jody casually mentioned that he had passed out while lying
on the bed watching TV. When I questioned him further, he said he had passed
out several times that week, but he hadn’t said anything because he thought
“it was no big deal.” (After thirty-nine years of marriage, I am no closer
to understanding the male species than I was as a bride.)

After convincing this man I love that it WAS a big deal, we drove to the
emergency room. The twenty-four-hour EKG they attached to Jody showed that his
heart was periodically stopping and his pulse rate was below thirty. While Robin
rocked Sofia at home alone, I waited for the surgeon to put a pacemaker in my
husband’s chest. The surgeon’s comment: “This is so serious that I won’t let
your husband go one night without a pacemaker.”

Right. No big deal.

My plan: Tea in a castle and zoo-time with Sofia.

My portion: A husband with flat lines on his EKG, a sick Sofia, and an exhausted
daughter.

S c e n e 3

I had compiled a long list of favorite outdoor activities for the glorious
Colorado summer . . . hikes up Raspberry Mountain to my waterfall, barbecues
on our deck, and worship times in my “rock sanctuary.” Oh, it sounded so wonderful.
But it was not to be. That summer Colorado faced its worst drought in 230 years
and the largest fire in its history (the Hayman fire). Flames gobbled up more
than 110,000 acres of national forest, polluting our crisp mountain air with
toxic smoke and covering our back deck in ash.

Every night I watched the news as firefighters from all over the country
told about their rigorous efforts to contain the out-of-control blaze. Planes
and helicopters buzzed above the smoke, dumping flame-retardant chemicals on
the inferno, but it was like trying to douse a bonfire with water from a thimble.

One afternoon as the fire moved closer to our home at the foothills of the
Rockies, the dreaded announcement came: “Be ready to evacuate. Unless the winds
change, the fire will be here at midnight.”

I scurried through the house gathering pictures and almost forty years of
treasures we’d collected from around the world as a result of our years as missionaries:
pine furniture from Austria, carpets from China, irreplaceable gifts from special
friends, and mementos from our children. Valuable files and documents filled
our two offices plus thousands of books, each one a treasure. As the truck with
our cherished possessions left our driveway, I watched it join a caravan of
cars. Many of our neighbors also were transporting their belongings to a safe
place.

Throughout the night I begged God to shift the winds and spare our mountain
home. God heard—and He answered. The winds shifted. Although we remained on
“standby to evacuate,” our neighborhood breathed a sigh of relief. A week later
we rejoiced as the official news was given: the danger was over; the Hayman
fire was contained.

Have I unpacked all the boxes and put everything back in its place? No. You
ask, “Linda, how could you let boxes sit around for four months? One word: migraines.
For months I have had a migraine headache almost every day, the latest of the
wars I’ve fought with my hormones. When I have a migraine my vision clouds,
my stomach lurches, and my head feels like someone hit it with a two-by-four.

Day after day, I lay in bed with a damp cloth on my forehead.

Summer turned into fall. The snap of the first frost shocked Colorado into
winter hibernation, turning the lifebearing green leaves to brown. I looked
at the gnarled, deadlooking bush outside my window and knew exactly how it must
feel.

My plan: A quiet, restful summer.

My portion: A fire-filled, migraine-filled summer.

Over the last three years my portion has also included two surgeries that
were supposed to help my body. One failed miserably; the other caused my hormones
to go berserk. My tears have wet the carpet as I’ve grieved over a conflict
with someone close to me. Hardest of all, my wonderful husband and I have walked
through difficult waters in our marriage. I had always assumed that as we “grew
older” our intimacy would grow sweeter. It has . . . but the sweet fragrance
has come as the flowers of our love have been tightly pressed.

What has been happening in your life?

Perhaps as you read these scenes from my life, you thought, Linda had it
easy. She hasn’t begun to feel the pain I’ve felt! And you are right. But pain
is pain, and all pain hurts. I’ve walked with friends whose marriages have been
torn asunder by infidelity, pornography, and deceit. I know homes divided by
a yellow emotional line. I’ve grieved with those who have lost a spouse or a
child. I’ve cried with others who spend twenty-four hours every day in chronic
pain, death crouching around the corner. I’ve ached with friends whose children
have been diagnosed as autistic, others whose teenagers have wandered far from
their Christian faith and embraced drugs, abortions, and “whatever.” I’ve agonized
with precious women who live with the horror of sexual abuse . . . evil done
to them and to their children. Long is the list of pain: cancer, financial disaster,
unemployment, parents with Alzheimer’s. What is a bear or a fire in comparison?

Each of us has our own “Valley of Weeping.” For some, the valley is shallow.
For others, the valley is so deep there seems to be no way out. My own valleys
are not anything special . . . they are simply what I have experienced. What
do we do when pain overtakes the path of delight we had planned?

People react differently to pain. Many women I know “stuff ” their pain by
denying its existence or by numbing it with pleasure (alcohol, drugs, shopping,
romance novels, television, and so on). Others talk incessantly about it in
an attempt to exorcise it. None of these responses brings about the true relief
we desire, nor do they glorify God.

God has a different answer for pain. His answer is found in the Psalms.

Most people know the Psalms as God’s hymnal of praise, but they are also
His picture book of pain. In the Psalms we see anguishing pain poured forth
with wrenching honesty and vulnerability, and we ask:

Is it possible to go through the Valley of Weeping without falling apart?

Is it possible to have joy in the midst of suffering?

Is it possible to grow in intimacy with the Lord as we travel through
the valley?

God and the psalmists say, “Yes,” and I say, “Yes.”

God has shown me that in my pain He wants to give me a blessing. With the
psalmists,

I remember

I hide

I cling

I
walk

AND

my
Valley of Weeping becomes a

Place
of Blessing.

With each page you turn, may God speak to your pain and reveal the blessing
He has for you.